The United States said it will supply relatively low-grade radar equipment to Taiwan's air force, an announcement that comes less than a week after the island's president urged Washington to provide it with new F-16 fighter jets.The US is not obligated by law to provide Taiwan with defensive weapons, but media outlets still keep repeating that claim. The sale would be in lieu of new F-16s; which the KMT Administration claims it wants (but fought against during the DPP Chen Administration). Instead, existing aircraft would get upgrades. Washington under both Obama and Bush has continued to be craven on that score.
U.S. State Department spokesman Philip J. Crowley said Tuesday that the U.S. sale includes "defence services, technical data, and defence articles" for Taiwan's air defence system, and radar equipment for the island's Indigenous Defence Fighter jets.
Crowley did not put a monetary figure on the deal or identify the American companies involved.
The U.S. is obligated by law to provide Taiwan defensive weapons.
A weakened Taiwan is an invitation to war in East Asia. Taiwan needs these fighters not merely to hold off China in an all-out, send-in-the-troops-in-fishing-boats scenario, but also in case of a limited war, such as a blockade. Taiwan's ability to break such a blockade on its own is a form of deterrence as well. Further, in the future Taiwan may have a government that actually gives a shit about the future of the island, and thus Taiwan need weapons to be a credible ally in likely future conflicts.
Note that I am not asking for the F-16s, I am merely observing. Washington has obviously lost its nerve, or else is waiting for Beijing to do something so heinous that F-16s become a rational and accepted response. Hopefully the latter, though I strongly doubt it.
Speaking of observing, one ominous trend that needs to be nipped in the bud is the rise of a more sophisticated pro-Beijing apologetics, such as that of Mark Valencia in the Taipei Times last week. I was traveling and couldn't respond but sorely wanted to. Given the startling pro-Beijing nature of the piece with its numerous omissions and distortions, I was kind of surprised to see that the Taipei Times even ran it. One thing it makes clear is that some of you edumacated types out there with Taiwan-related passions need to be submitting more commentaries!
Valencia is a scholar who has written at length on sovereignty issues involving China's claims to areas in its littoral. He writes from a pro-Beijing perspective -- for example, read this longer piece on the East China Sea disputes carefully. Note in his description of the dispute between China, Taiwan, and Japan over the Senkakus he never forthrightly states that China did not begin claiming the islands until after Japanese scientists said there might be oil nearby in 1968. I've already posted before how PRC and ROC maps pre-1968 either show the Senkakus as Japanese, or show them as next to Taiwan without being part of China. If there were any doubt on that score, I have a copy of a Renminerbao piece from 1953 that not only says the Senkakus are Japanese but also uses the Japanese names (in Chinese) to identify them. John Tkacik, who collects such things, wrote a couple of years ago:
In my collection of maps, I have a facsimile of plate 18 of the Zhonghua Renmin Gongheguo Fen Sheng Ditu (People’s Republic of China Provincial Map) of “Fujian Province, Taiwan Province” published in mimi (confidential) form by the Zhonghua Renmin Gongheguo Guojia Cehui Zongju (Headquarters, National Surveillance Bureau), Beijing, 1969, which identified the Senkaku Islands as the “Jiange Qundao” — using the Chinese characters for the Japanese name “Senkaku Island Group” — rather than the Chinese name “Diaoyu.”In other words, until 1969 China treated the Senkakus as Japanese. Valencia's Taipei Times piece contains the same telling kinds of omissions. Observe first that China's own actions are consistently omitted or downplayed. Consider:
However, despite US arrogance, offering to “facilitate” multilateral talks on the South China Sea disputes — which is what really infuriated Beijing — it is clear that China has been its own worst enemy in this matter. It refused to file a joint claim with Malaysia and Vietnam to the continental shelf in the South China Sea. It then filed an objection to their claim, and attached a map with its nine-dash line ambiguously claiming most of the sea."China has been its own worst enemy." To say someone is their own worst enemy is to accuse them of something akin to klutziness, not malice -- it downplays the intent of their actions. Valencia also accuses the US of arrogance although it is China that has claimed the entire South China Sea and refuses to negotiate and said it would go to war with anyone who objected -- what could possibly be more arrogant? Finally "observe" (you can't because they've been omitted) that the reason Vietnam and everyone else has been pushed into the US corner is because of China's military build up, threats, and recent actions, such as regularly seizing Vietnamese trawlers. All gone.
It publicly categorized the South China sea as a “core interest” akin to Tibet and Taiwan, ie something it would fight over, and allowed its Ministry of Defense spokesperson Geng Yansheng (耿雁生) to say “China has indisputable sovereignty of the South Sea and China has sufficient historical and legal backing” to underpin its claims.
These actions and accompanying large military exercises in the area provided a diplomatic opportunity for the US and pushed the ASEAN countries into the US corner.
Valencia earlier had stated:
The activities of the US EP-3 planes and Navy ships, the Bowditch and the Impeccable, probably collectively, have included the active “tickling” of China’s coastal defenses to provoke and observe a response, interference with shore-to-ship and submarine communications, “preparation of the battlefield,” using legal subterfuge to evade the consent regime and tracking China’s new nuclear submarines for potential targeting as they enter and exit their base.Actually, these are intelligence collection activities commonly undertaken by the Powers. During the Cold War Russian and US signals intelligence constantly tested each other in just this way. In fact they still go on today (Russians buzz US carriers). Valencia elsewhere refers to Chinese vessels behaving in similar manner towards the Japanese! And recent Chinese aggressive moves against the Japanese are omitted here (it goes without saying). Who can forget the Chinese sub that surfaced inside a US carrier group? Valencia can, apparently. Because everyone knows it is arrogant, threatening, and provocative when the US does it, but it is only klutzy when China does.
Few countries would tolerate such provocative activities by a potential enemy without responding in some fashion. These are not passive intelligence collection activities commonly undertaken and usually tolerated by most states, but are intrusive and controversial practices that China regards as a threat of the use of force.
BTW, which Asian nation has the largest signals intelligence fleet?
In other words, Valencia omits any information that might cast Beijing in a negative light, including the whole context of the growing regional fear of China's aims (except for a single fleeting reference about China's aggressiveness toward conflicting claims at the beginning), and then gives us a selectively Beijing-centric view of affairs, complete with the telling us again and again how Beijing feels (but not how Taiwan, Vietnam, Malaysia, or the US feel):
- and China’s angry response
- but are intrusive and controversial practices that China regards as a threat of the use of force
- which is what really infuriated Beijing
- If anything, it may have convinced Beijing that the die is cast. It could confirm its worst fears, that the US is stealthily trying to draw ASEAN or some of its members together with Australia, Japan and South Korea into a soft alliance to constrain, if not contain, China.
Beijing’s struggle to break out of these constrants, politically and militarily, will set the stage for rivalry and tension in the years ahead.
In the Japanese case the war against the US is conventionally explained as a war for oil and other resources, in which Japan was "forced" to engage because the US cut off its oil and it couldn't leave China or end the fighting there. In 1940 after Japan moved into French Indochina the US placed its first serious sanctions on Japan, but did not cut off oil for fear of provoking Japan. In 1941 Japan further moved into the French colony, and the US responded by shutting off the oil. Conventional explanation says that Japan attacked Pearl Harbor because of the oil cut off, since it planned to Dutch Indonesia and British Malaysia to grab their oil and other resources.
However, during the debates in Japan over what to do, an often neglected event occurred. The equivalent of the minister for natural resources informed the cabinet that the oil cut off was no problem. All Japan had to do was wait a year or two, and he could have a coal-to-oil program using the plentiful supplies of Manchurian coal at Japan's disposal. Japan could have as much oil as it wanted. No war was necessary. Nobody listened.
Japan insanely attacking the US and setting its people back a generation in progress. The US insanely attacking Iraq, and persisting in its lost cause in Afghanistan, blowing up its budget and cheating its own people at a time of desperate need. China now engaged in a needless military build up to annex territories of its neighbors, reducing its ability to increase its own living standards and heading for needless war that will further impair the progress of its people.
Stop the insanity. And please, stop shilling for it too.
___________
Daily Links:
- Heritage argues that the 2010 DOD report on China downplays Taiwan
- David finds some good links on Taiwan's indie music scene
- My Several Worlds on urban regeneration in Taipei
- Mekong River water, the US, and China
- Global Voices on ECFA
- Ma's investment project tour moves around the nation.
- Nothing to do with Taiwan: Six Keys to being excellent at anything and Using UV light to see the original colors of greek statues
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Michael, mostly good post, but please don't repeat AP's meme by also calling Taiwan "the island," since the discussion is about politics (as opposed to geography, where it would be okay). Islands don't have presidents -- countries do.
ReplyDeleteI'd also suggest that instead of countering this every time by just saying that "The US is not obligated by law to provide Taiwan with defensive weapons," you create your own short countermeme (with link) to remind readers what the Taiwan Relations Act actually does say. You can just paste it in each time the way AP does -- except yours would be truthful -- and you use it until it catches on. That way, at least the readers will know better when they come across anyone repeating wrong/mendacious info.
BTW, I've noticed that the Taipei Times has been doing that arrogant Valencia-type shit more and more lately. WTF?
Another thing: When you say "Japanese names (in Chinese)," I think you mean Kanji.
Tim Maddog
Confusing. Are Chinese characters kanji if they appear in a PRC text?
ReplyDeleteGood idea on the counterlink.
Michael
Michael, you asked:
ReplyDelete- - -
Are Chinese characters kanji if they appear in a PRC text?
- - -
You could be right. I'm just thinking that because they represent a Japanese name/pronunciation ("Senkaku Shotō"), I'd tend to call it Kanji. However, Chinese speakers might read the characters as "Jiāngé Zhūdǎo" anyway.
Tim Maddog
I agree with Maddog about kanji - Japanese names are not written in Chinese.
ReplyDeleteMy Japanese textbooks define 漢字 as "Sino-Japanese Characters (or Ideographs)". Although many of the characters used in Japan are the same as those used in China and Taiwan, there are also characters that have been created by the Japanese, as well as kanji that have taken on different meanings from the original Chinese. In addition, in the late 19th century, the Japanese coined a number of new kanji terms to better explain Western concepts. Many of these new compounds were later adopted by the Chinese, a list of which can be seen here: http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/ek20081007a1.html.
You're right, it is confusing.
You claim re: Japan that "no war was necessary" as of 1941, but surely that is a rather US-centric standpoint, as Japan had already entered into a war with the ROC in 1937, not to mention puppetized Manchuria.
ReplyDeleteStefano, I am clearly referring to the war against the US when I say "no war is necessary". The US position was that Japan could make war on China and the US would complain but do nothing. Only if Japan moved against the colonies of the western nations would there be a problem.
ReplyDeleteThere are people who support the "US hegemony", people who accept it, people who would like to see it evolve into something different, and people who just hate it. This guy Valencia is obviously in the last category. They'll say and support anything as long as it's anti US hegemony. These are the people who defended Stalin because the capitalist media was certainly lying about him.
ReplyDeleteI don't think anyone takes what he says seriously, though, do you? I wouldn't worry about it -- unless you own stock in the Taipei Times....
Go easy on the Japan comparisons. They won't bear much weight.
(d), thanks for the comments. I'm not sure any historical analogy fits well. I guess I'm just thoroughly frustrated that China seems bent on starting a war it doesn't need to start at all.
ReplyDeleteI don't think anyone takes what he says seriously, though, do you? I wouldn't worry about it -- unless you own stock in the Taipei Times....
ReplyDeleteValencia is not identified in the TT by his true association, The Nautlius Institute for Security and Sustainability, with offices in San Francisco, Melbourne and Seoul. He is a maritime policy analyst.
Their mission appears to be a liberal/progressive one, broadly we should all be friends for the good of the planet by creating dialogues and sustainability partnerships throughout Asia and the Pacific. Not at all an unrealistic mission.
They're funded by some rather significant US Foundations, but the board of three people doesn't seem all that impressive.
Most of the bios and background info trumpet the fact that they've all been widely published in lots of newspapers, but as to their real influence over political events, that seems somewhat doubtful.
@Anon 12:37
ReplyDeleteYeah, I wondered about that Nautilus Institute too. But I read the East China Sea article Michael linked to and found it a pretty reasonable (accepting that it leaves out the information Michael mentions, whatever the importance of that is) discussion of a pretty tragi-comic issue. So maybe Nautilus is legit. But that TT editorial was really extreme; or I suppose it showed the true flaw in his logic, thinking that peacefully resolving these ocean boundary issues requires the US navy to back away from them.
BTW those Greek statues are really ugly in color.
Under the TRA, the U.S. is obligated to supply the ROC with weapons of a defensive nature but conditional upon need assessments.
ReplyDelete'conditional upon needs assessments' means that the US can do whatever it likes. There's nothing to stop it from declaring the island does not need weapons.
ReplyDelete